Gravitational wave standard sirens from GWTC-3 combined with DESI DR2 and DESY5: A late-universe probe of the Hubble constant and dark energy
Ji-Yu Song, Guo-Hong Du, Tian-Nuo Li, Ling-Feng Wang, Jing-Zhao Qi, Jing-Fei Zhang, Xin Zhang

TL;DR
This paper combines gravitational-wave standard sirens with BAO and supernova data to independently measure the Hubble constant and dark energy properties, providing insights into late-universe cosmology without relying on CMB data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel late-universe data combination using GW standard sirens, BAO, and SNe Ia to constrain cosmological parameters independently of CMB.
Findings
H_0 = 74.8^{+6.3}_{-8.9} km/s/Mpc, consistent with distance ladder measurements
Dark energy equation-of-state parameters suggest mild phantom-crossing behavior
Demonstrates GW standard sirens' effectiveness in breaking parameter degeneracies
Abstract
Recently, the combination of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) Data Release 2 (DR2) baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data and the Planck cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurements has shown a 3 preference for a dynamical dark energy model with a phantom-crossing behavior. However, such a phantom-crossing dark energy evolution further exacerbates the already severe Hubble tension in the CDM model. Moreover, there exists a tension between the DESI DR2 BAO and CMB datasets. Therefore, it is essential to measure the Hubble constant and dark-energy equation-of-state (EoS) parameters using only late-universe observations. In this work, we investigate a novel late-universe data combination: gravitational-wave (GW) standard sirens, BAO, and Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). This combination provides a fully distance-ladder- and CMB-independent…
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